IT is as well now to say something about Grant’s
method of work, especially in India. In the administration of Lord
Dalhousie and of all his predecessors, every paper, in every
department, Foreign, Home, Financial and Military, had been
submitted to the Governor-General first, and was then sent round by
his Private Secretary to the various members of Council. Some of the
papers were either matters of routine or were of no great value or
serious importance. As the Empire expanded, as references increased
in number, and as new departments were created under the Council
[Public Works, for instance], it became politic and proper to
relieve the Head of Government of unnecessary labour and to save
time. So, in the administration of Lord Canning, mainly at Grant’s
suggestion, the Supreme Council resolved itself into something like
a Cabinet In the Foreign Department every letter or reference went
direct to the Viceroy. The business of the Home, the Financial, the
Military, and the Legislative Departments, was referred in the first
place to the Civilian members, to the Military, and to the Legal
member. Each of these officials was enabled to dispose at once of a
considerable mass of detail, while he was bound to refer every
question of significance to the Viceroy. This system ensured
despatch and produced other excellent results. Grant’s own method of
conducting business, whether as Secretary, Councillor, or
Lieutenant-Governor, was something of this kind. Lord Dalhousie, who
was as willing to get work out of his subordinates as he was prompt
to rebuke unauthorised and impertinent advice on their part, once
took occasion to define the sphere and limits which such officials
should observe. The Head of any Government and all members of
Council might, he said, pen Minutes. Secretaries, and Under
Secretaries should prepare Notes; sifting a huge mass of papers,
extracting the pith of previous correspondence, and, without
appearing to dictate, suggesting the points for decision and the
precedents for departmental action. Such a Note was a precis and
something more. Grant used to remark that the careful preparation of
a change. And these grand swelling projects, though constantly
debated and criticised, were apt to end in failure or smoke, while
much good might have been effected by a moderate instalment of
reform.
[“Note” on the above lines might, in India and
elsewhere, have saved us from many a false step in finance and in
civil and military administration. For years Grant insisted on the
paramount necessity of looking carefully into what had taken place
before, if you were to estimate the chances and contingencies of the
future. And in all the discussions and controversies it might be
said of him, as it was said of Chancellor Thurlow by Dr Johnson,
that “he laid his mind fairly alongside” of his opponent In dealing
with a colleague or a subordinate he never acted on any assumed or
inherent superiority of position. He was ready to meet each argument
by another, and to convince by reason and logic. And if in the
course of a debate, oral or written, his distinctions might
occasionally seem too finely drawn, his conclusions were clear and
consistent, and generally convinced or silenced his opponents.
No man was more ready to accept fulness and
completeness of reform in any one department, but he more than once
remarked, pathetically, that he had in all his long career seen many
desirable alterations and improvements indefinitely postponed, on
the plea that they would soon form part of some contemplated
structural and organic.
This seems the proper place to insert the following
extract from a long and confidential letter from Lord Dalhousie,
showing the very high value which, eventually, the Governor-General
set on Grant’s co-operation and judgment A large portion of the
letter is taken up with the affairs of Pegu, which had been
conquered by our forces in the second Burmese War of 1852-53. The
main question then at issue was, whether the King of Burma could be
induced to sign a formal treaty, ceding the Province of Pegu to the
British Government; and the Governor - General discusses at length
the matter of possible compensation to the King, in the event of
such a cession, very much as the same subject has been discussed by
European statesmen in regard to other countries in our own time. As
a matter of history no such treaty was ever signed, and we hold the
Province of Pegu, and its seaboard (connecting the two Provinces of
Tenasserim and Arracan originally ceded after the campaign of
1824-26) by mere right of conquest. Lord Dalhousie, it should be
observed, was writing from Coonoor in the Nilgiris, where he had
gone for his health in the hot season of 1855. Grant was, of course,
at Calcutta, where the senior member of council acted as President
of that body in the absence of the Governor-General On some of the
points on which Lord Dalhousie invites Grant’s free opinion, he was
not bound to have consulted his colleague at all.
“Coonoor, 28/A May 1855.
“My Dear Grant,
“I have to thank you for your letter of 16th inst,
and am glad of the opportunity of speaking to you on one or two
matters, whereanent I wish to consult you.
“If your slip about the military works was originally
‘ free and easy,’ as you say, Baker had duly stiffened it, with a
proper portion of departmental starch, before he sent it on : for I
observed nothing which need have given you the trouble of writing
about it; although I have reason to be glad you thought there was,
since I have profited by the supposed necessity.
“P. has flared up most unusually and most needlessly
about this Pegu foray. He seems to me to have felt himself in the
position of the well-known gentleman who had no case, and to have
set about ' abusing the opposite attorney,’ accordingly. If you are
to be thought Quaker-like, you will see that I am still more drab-coloured,
and wear my brim even broader than you. I hold that we have no
ground of quarrel; and that if we had, it would be absurd to use it
as such.
“Well—I think the Cabul Treaty was a good job. They
ought to think so in England, and I hope they will. Our friend from
the Caucasus, I see, is going to assault us all about the 5 per cent
loan; and with the innate love of fair play belonging to a true
Briton of the 'country party' he means not to wait either for
explanation or defence. That won’t do us much harm, I think.
“I hope you will look after the expenditure at
Headquarters. If N. and others are going too fast, they must be
stopped. We may be absurd, but we must not spend money which we not
only have not got, but which we can’t get
“I was sure of what you all would think of the
Peshawur Brigade business. Is it not enough to exasperate one? And
the people talk of a civilian arrogantly interfering in military
matters with the C. in C.
“Assuming that the mission will go to Ava as was
intended, I want to get your opinion as to the instructions which
should be given to the Envoy regarding a treaty. You know my opinion
of the intrinsic value of such an article ; but the people at Home
have always been anxious for it, and I think we are bound to do our
utmost to obtain it Again, / do not think the King will ever sign a
treaty; but, for the same reason as before, I think we are bound to
try and induce him to do so.
“The Court lately authorised us to give up Mengdun,
but the time for this cession has passed away. The King hinted at it
last year, and he was told that if he wished for it he must complete
the transaction before the end of the year. He did not do so. His
Envoys said, and could be got to say, not a word about it It is now
too late. The
Mengdun people are fairly settled under our rule;
they are the beslf disposed toward it of any in Pegu. We ought not,
and we must not, now agree to give them up to Burma again. Moreover,
it would not be for our advantage to fix a time with the King, and
then to give way upon it.
“In all former drafts we have insisted upon having
either a specific cession of the Province of Pegu, or an indirect
recognition of our possession of it As this seems to be unpalatable
beyond endurance, and as (since the period when this provision in
the treaty was much desired) the Governor-General has had an
opportunity of informing the King’s Ambassadors that the Provinces
of Pegu would never be restored to Burma, I think we might now
forego all demand for an article containing either cession of Pegu
or recognition of our possession of it and might content ourselves
with designating Phayre ‘Commissioner of Pegu’ in the preamble.
"In that case the treaty would contain simply the
usual ‘perpetual peace and friendship’ clause, and the general
permission for international trade which was contemplated in the
former draft.
“But looking to the anxiety which this King seems
really to feel for the increase of trade with his dominions, and
having regard to the desire for some treaty at Home, to which I have
already alluded, it is worth while to consider whether a treaty
might not be negotiated on the basis of commercial concessions on
both sides. It has been often said that the King frets over the
establishment of customhouses on the Meaday frontier. Many among
ourselves have deprecated their establishment at all; and nobody has
defended them except upon considerations of revenue, and of the hold
which they give us over the Court of Ava in the absence of any
personal treaty.
"If a treaty were to be concluded, those who rely on
the efficacy of such an instrument would consider that we had
secured every political advantage which a line of customhouses could
confer; while I, who set no store by the treaty, would feel that
practically we had not loosened our hold over the Court of Ava,
because, if commercial intercourse were admitted by the treaty, we
should still retain the power of closing the river, and thus of
stopping all such intercourse, whenever sufficient cause of offence
shquld be given us.
“The objection on the score of loss of revenue could
not be so readily met It is evident from the progressive improvement
of the returns that we should sacrifice a good many lacs a year
before long, if we were to abolish the frontier line. Can anything
we could gain compensate for that loss? I think nothing less than
the desired treaty would compensate for the loss, but upon the
whole, that the Home Government would think the price to be paid not
too much for a treaty with Burma. What think you?
“If there are to be concessions, how far are we to
carry them? We cannot, of course, give up the sea-customs; because
we can’t afford so heavy an additional sacrifice of revenue; and
besides, to abolish all customs in Pegu would be to make it a
smuggling depdt for all India, far more formidable than Moulmein
ever was. But we might offer to abolish all duties now imposed at
the Meaday frontier upon articles going up or down.
“This concession could not be without an equivalent;
and I see none that we could require, except that as we bind
ourselves to take no customs duties on the Irrawaddy, the King
should bind himself to take no customs duties on that river either.
“I have said there must be an equivalent I think so,
because the sacrifice of so much revenue merely to obtain a Treaty
of Amity, would betoken more anxiety on that subject than it would
be politic in us to betray.
"You will perceive also that I have limited the
internal free-trade to the Irrawaddy. This seems necessary, because
there is no port on the Sitang; and although from the difficulty of
access to that river, no great loss might be incurred by it, still a
large current of smuggled trade might be got up, under the
encouragement given by the removal of all custom-houses on that
river.
"I presume that on all teak timber, whatever its
place of origin, the present duty would be taken at the port of
export
“Even if this agreement should be made, and even
though it should be worded in the most general terms, it would still
create a chance and cause of collision beyond what now exists. For,
if the King should agree to take no duties on the Irrawaddy, a cause
of quarrel will arise on every occurrence of the very probable event
of an unauthorised exaction of duty, or fee, or dustoorit, or
whatever name might be given to it, by a Governor or other smaller
functionary along the river course.
“The risk, however, might be met by an article
declaring that on the infraction of this agreement by either of the
contracting parties, it should be competent to the other party to
close the river to all trade until the grievance should be removed
and reparation made.
“It will occur to you at once that recourse might be
had by us to this remedy, without the authority of an article in the
treaty. The advantage, however, of putting it into the treaty seems
to me to consist in this, that it would provide a specific remedy
for a specific grievance, which remedy would be short of war, and
not to be extended to that extreme measure unless we pleased.
“No doubt, if such a treaty were concluded, the
balance of advantage would still be on our side. But that is the
natural effect of our holding possession of all the seaports by
which trade can now have access to Burma; and it is the necessary
consequence of the Burmese folly and arrogance, which led to their
incurring so heavy a penalty as to be dependent on those they
injured for access to the ocean. Taking the position of affairs as
they stand, the withdrawal of all duties upon the river by the King
would not, I think, be more than an equivalent for our withdrawal of
the duties we levy at Meaday.
“Such are my notions at present 1 have inflicted upon
you an unmerciful letter in expounding them; but the subject is one
of moment, and interesting to you, I know.
“There is another, and a very different subject on
which I want your mind. W. B. O’Shaughnessy has done real and right
good work for India. I would fain get him some handle before I leave
India. The question is, what shall it be? He has not sate upon a
covenanted throne, and moulded a rude kingdom into a model province,
like John Lawrence. He has not actually created a vast work of
genius, like Cautley. But he has adapted the creation of the West to
the peculiarities of the East with a genius of his own, and has
given us to our hand, for everyday use, the greatest discovery of
modem times, over a vast space, in brief time, and with marvellous
success. What shall be done unto him? The offer of a knighthood only
would make him hang himself, or assassinate us, or both. Money alone
would be pleasant How think you ?
“I spare you more. One word only to thank you for
your enquiry after my health. I have not advanced, rather gone back,
during the last ten days; but still I am better than I was, and
thankful accordingly.—Always yours sincerely.”
It is hardly possible, with the materials at my
disposal, to deal with this memoir from any other than the official
side. Grant was not in any sense a Bureaucrat, or what in
Anglo-Indian phraseology is denominated a “ Bahadur.” He did not
hastily bestow his confidence, and he was not lavish of praise in
his dealings with his subordinates, but no man in such a position
was more ready to acknowledge good service and devotion to the
State, and his mode of conducting business once understood, no
unpleasantness could arise. But it must be admitted that he was not
much given to private correspondence, though he was fortunate in the
attachment of many friends, and in the devotion of his school of
followers. Of demi-official letters there is abundance, as the
extracts about the Mutiny prove. Letters to friends and relatives
are comparatively few. Writing to an old Indian subordinate, from
Jamaica, in 1874, he gravely tells him—
“Understand my principles; they are that everybody
whom I wish to hear from is bound to write to me, but I am not bound
to write to anybody. I should like to know what you are doing,
saying, and writing. For me, in consequence of sins committed in
some previous ‘yug’ (Hindu form for era), I am to stay here till
next year, if I keep above ground so long. Now that I have this one
year more, I begin almost to regret it But I have a College and a
canal on the stocks, and I do not like to go away and shut up for
good (or bad) till they are launched. By-the-bye, do you know a
Principal ? He must be a rara avis; such a man as I remember is
described in a French old rural economy book, the ‘Mai son Rustique,’
as fit to take charge of the turkeys—an incomparable man in a small
way. The bulk of the scholars will be young Browns and Blacks in
training for the ministry of all denominations. But there will be, I
doubt not, an upper crust I am under articles not to have Theologism;
Presbyterianism and other ‘isms’ being forbidden, it is a fair
demand not to allow Theologism. Yet science must be the mainstay of
the College. And I incline to think that it would be well if the
Principal filled the Chair of Natural Science. Anyhow, he must be a
very sensible, tacty, pleasant, and above all, lucky man. He will
have a first-rate house and £700 or £800 a year. If a good man
really, the last sum, probably. My notion is to have three men.
1. Natural Science.
2. Mathematics and Mechanics.
3. Letters and Languages.
“Some lecturers and masters could be got here for
Chemistry. My notion also is to have only English, including
Literature and General History, in the necessaries; providing for
Latin (possibly Greek) and one or two modem languages.”
When in England on leave for a short period about the
same time, he writes to the same correspondent: “I shall be
delighted to receive (but not further to circulate) a box of grouse,
with any coloured label,” an official joke which all Anglo-Indians
will understand.
Though not what may be termed a literary man, he did
not confine his reading to newspapers and to Blue Books. He was
familiar with the best classical English writers, and with French
Literature; and like Dr Arnold, Archbishop Whately, and Dean
Stanley, he always returned with the keenest relish to his favourite
Waverley Novels. After the termination of his service in Jamaica,
the remainder of his life was passed mainly on the Rothiemurchus
estate, to which he succeeded on the death of his elder brother, and
which he did much to improve. Grant married, in 1835, Henrietta
Chichele Plowden, daughter of Trevor Chichele Plowden, Bengal, C.S.
Grant left five sons and three daughters, and died on 6th January
1893, and his eldest son, John Peter Grant, of the Bengal Civil
Service, did not long survive his father. The estate is now held by
John Peter, fourth of the name, Advocate of the Scotch Bar,
Sheriff-Substitute of Nairn, and grandson of the
Lieutenant-Governor. Of Grant’s family the eldest daughter, Elinor,
married Sir James Colvile, Chief Justice of the Old Supreme Court of
Calcutta, and after his retirement from that post in 1859, Member of
the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. His second daughter,
Jane, married Richard Strachey, R.E., now General Sir R. Strachey,
G.C.S.I. He gave most valuable assistance as Secretary to Grant,
when at Benares and Allahabad in 1857. It is hoped that this
narrative may be accepted as correct in all essentials by the few
surviving Civil or Military servants of the Company and the Crown,
who served under Grant in India and Jamaica. And to men of a younger
generation, his principles, his actions, and his State papers may be
recommended for study and adoption in the treatment of unlooked-for
incidents, necessary changes, and permanent Reforms which concern
the character of the Civil Service, the welfare of India,
agricultural, mercantile, and social, and the dignity and credit of
England as an Imperial and Asiatic Power. |